“We are ready for some changes so we can get some businesses going here,” said Charles Gaunce, a staunch LePage supporter and owner of Central Maine Motors Auto Group in Waterville. “We don’t have the best reputation outside the state.”

“LePage has the opportunity to use his bully pulpit to seek efficiencies all over the place,” said Wick Johnson, president of the Augusta machining firm Kennebec Technologies, who supported Libby Mitchell.

LePage ran on a platform of creating smaller, smarter government, which he said will reduce regulatory barriers and help Maine businesses create more jobs. He advocated lower taxes and controlling state spending, and pledged to make the state’s health care system more efficient.

LePage reiterated his commitment to business Friday at a breakfast meeting hosted by the Portland Community Chamber. “We will have a different climate in dealing with business. It’s going to be, ‘You want to put people to work? How can we help you?”‘ he said.

That’s a message that gives chamber members “a sense of relief,” said Christopher Hall, the chamber’s senior vice president of government relations. For decades, Hall said, the business community has had an adversarial relationship with state government.

Some business owners are encouraged by LePage’s business background — he has been the general manager of Marden’s Surplus & Salvage and head of a consulting firm.

“It’s a businessperson talking to another businessperson. The small-business community has had very little luck talking to the people in Augusta for the last 10 or 15 years,” said Dan Bickford, owner of the heavy equipment rental company Eagle Rental in Waterville.

The LePage victory came just weeks after Forbes magazine ranked Maine last in its “Best States for Business” report, which examined the business environment in all states.

Many businesspeople say complex and overlapping state agency regulations hinder business development. They say small businesses lack the resources to navigate muddled rules.

“The laws are written for Walmart, not small companies,” Bickford said. “One law says you can do this, another law says you can’t.”

Bickford hopes that with Le-Page in charge, agencies will work more closely with small businesses, helping them understand and comply with regulations.

“Instead of code enforcers, we should have code facilitators who say, ‘What can we do to help you do business?”‘ Bickford said. “making things clear and definite, you will see small businesses expand.”

For instance, developers planning projects larger than 75,000 square feet must conduct a nine-point project review that examines factors including community impact and traffic patterns. Picard said an unfavorable score on any of the criteria can kill or stall projects, regardless of community support.

“The past few years have been a challenge making sure the voice of business was heard at the State House,” Picard said. “Perhaps business issues will now get more focus.”

Hall said he expects the LePage administration to re-examine Maine’s regulations and compare them to those of other states and the federal government. He said business owners do not seek massive deregulation, but policies that are “normal and accepted and good practice around the country.”

Julie-Marie Bickford, executive director of the Maine Dairy Industry Association, called the change in administration an opportunity to educate new legislators about the complexities and challenges of modern farms.

“Any time you have a new governor and new Legislature, it is an education process,” she said. “We will reach out to legislative leaders and offer information. And individual farms will say, ‘Come on over, take a walk in the barn.”‘

Maine business owners also hope LePage will work to reduce health care costs and curb business and income taxes.

“You hear stories about businesses not coming to Maine because owners realize they would have that level of taxes,” said Johnson of Kennebec Technologies. “We need an environment where you don’t have killers right out of the gate.”

Hall hopes the new governor works to modify minimum-coverage regulations for health insurance companies and to encourage competition from out-of-state health care providers.

“When you introduce competition, it is clear you will pay less,” he said.

Health care and taxes also concern Will Rood, president of Benton-based aircraft component maker B&B Precise Products Inc., which has 42 employees.

While some LePage critics fault the governor-elect’s brusque style, Rood thinks it might work to businesses’ advantage.

“I feel his style is going to certainly create changes that will make it easier to operate,” he said. “It isn’t always going to feel good, but it will be positive for businesses and job creation.”

And Rood is ready for concrete improvements.

“The campaigns can be tiresome, listening to what everyone is going to do. I am looking forward to the action,” he said.

Staff Writer Jonathan Hemmerdinger can be contacted at 791-6316 or at:

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